
Betrayal at Sterling
Chapter 2
I limped through the gleaming glass doors of Sterling Industries, my hand throbbing beneath its hasty bandage. Each step sent jolts of pain through my body, but it was nothing compared to the ache in my chest. The marble lobby stretched before me, familiar yet suddenly foreign—a kingdom I was born to rule, yet where I now felt like an intruder.
Then I saw them.
Ryan and Madison stood by the reception desk, chatting animatedly with two HR assistants. Madison's laugh—that practiced, tinkling sound I once thought genuine—echoed across the polished floor. She wore her stolen Hermès bag proudly displayed on her arm, the very one she'd accused me of damaging.
I froze, my breath catching in my throat. The betrayal on the sidewalk was still raw, the image of Ryan driving away with her seared into my mind. Yet here they were, in my family's company, as if I were the outsider.
"I just know we're going to love working here," Madison was saying, her voice carrying across the lobby. "Sterling Industries is exactly the kind of forward-thinking company we've been looking for."
Ryan nodded eagerly, his eyes bright with ambition. The same eyes that had looked at me with contempt just an hour ago now gleamed with hope and excitement. I watched as Madison leaned closer to him, her red lips nearly brushing his ear.
"Don't worry about the interview," she whispered, loud enough for me to hear as I inched closer. "I'm about to call my godmother. Eleanor Sterling practically raised me—she'll make sure we're both hired before the day is over."
My blood turned to ice. Eleanor Sterling—my mother—Madison's godmother? The audacity of the lie was breathtaking.
Ryan smirked, clearly pleased with this insider advantage. "I knew sticking with you was the right move," he murmured back. "Victoria's been holding me back for too long with her aimless lifestyle."
Their words cut deeper than the concrete that had scraped my palms. Two years of my carefully constructed life, shattered in a moment. Two years of Ryan claiming to love me for who I was, not what I had—revealed as a complete lie in less than an hour.
I straightened my spine, drawing on a strength I hadn't known I possessed. This was my company. My legacy. And I would not be made small in my own house.
I approached the reception desk, careful to stay out of Ryan and Madison's line of sight. The young receptionist looked up with a practiced smile.
"Good morning. Welcome to Sterling Industries. How may I help you?"
"Victoria Sterling," I said, my voice steadier than I expected. "I need directions to the executive suite, please."
The receptionist's smile faltered as she tapped at her keyboard. "I'm sorry, could you repeat your name?"
"Victoria Sterling," I repeated, louder this time. Ryan and Madison turned at the sound of my voice, their expressions morphing from shock to something more calculated.
The receptionist frowned at her screen. "I don't see any appointment for a Victoria Sterling. Are you expected?"
"She certainly isn't," Madison said, stepping forward with a predatory smile. "Victoria, what are you doing here? Following us now?"
Ryan crossed his arms, shaking his head with exaggerated disappointment. "This is getting pathetic, Vic. Just because we're interviewing at Sterling doesn't mean you have to pretend you have connections here."
The receptionist looked between us, confusion evident on her face. "I'm sorry, but there's no Victoria Sterling in our system. Are you perhaps here for an interview as well?"
My mouth opened, but no words came out. How was this possible? I was Victoria Sterling—heir to this entire company. My name should have been at the top of every list.
Unless...
Unless my father had taken our agreement about anonymity more seriously than I'd realized. Unless my identity had been completely scrubbed from the system until my official start date.
I stood there, bleeding and humiliated, in the lobby of my own family's empire—unrecognized, unwelcome, and utterly alone.
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